In yet another setback for Remy Ma, the rapper’s friend Makeda Barnes-Joseph has filed a $10 million civil lawsuit against her, according to Reuters. Remy Ma (real name: Reminisce Smith) is accused of shooting Barnes-Joseph in July after a dispute that took place on a street in New York.

In the suit, reportedly filed in a New York court on Friday, Barnes-Joseph accuses Remy Ma of “willfully, wantonly and maliciously” shooting her. The suit also names the rapper’s record companies, including Universal Music Group and Sure Shot Recordings, as defendants, alleging they encouraged Remy Ma to engage in violent behavior as part of her image.

Ivan Fisher, her lawyer, said Barnes-Joseph’s lawsuit was “looking for the deepest pocket it could find” and called it “irresponsible,” according to Reuters.

Barnes-Joseph reportedly claims in the suit that she suffered severe physical harm and mental anguish after the July shooting, which took place on a New York street after a dispute over money missing from the rapper’s belongings. Remy Ma fled the scene but later turned herself in and was charged on counts of attempted murder, assault and weapon possession.

Remy Ma is due to stand trail next year on charges of gang assault and witness tampering stemming from an August incident in which prosecutors say the rapper ordered a group of men to attack Barnes-Joseph’s boyfriend. The man suffered a shattered jaw in the attack, according to The Associated Press. Remy Ma has pleaded not guilty to the charges, vehemently denying that she shot Barnes-Joseph. She faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted.

The town of Kentwood, Louisiana, proudly — and loudly — trumpets the fact that it is the birthplace of Britney Spears, whether it’s on the city’s official Web site (”Kentwood, Louisiana — Wonderful Water, Woodlands and Wildlife … Britney
Spears’ Hometown”) or in the Britney Spears exhibit at the Kentwood Museum (”Full of Britney memorabilia and much more!”).

Naturally, over the years, citizens of the tiny town on the Louisiana/Mississippi border have become increasingly protective of their most famous export … a level of protection that apparently extends to that export’s 16-year-old sister, Jamie Lynn.

Unless you’ve been living in a cave for the past 72 hours, you’re no doubt aware that Jamie Lynn recently announced that she was 12-weeks pregnant, info that was met with equal parts shock and support from her fans and fellow celebs.

So on Thursday, MTV News decided to head up Interstate 55 to Kentwood (we were already in New Orleans for an interview with Brad Pitt) to get some local reactions. And let’s just say we weren’t exactly welcomed with open arms. Our camera was shooed away from the Kentwood First Baptist Church (where Jamie Lynn and her boyfriend, Casey Aldridge, reportedly first met), the museum and local hot spots like Sonic and Pizza Inn. Townspeople greeted us with glares or “no comments,” and at every stop, pickup trucks whizzed by, horns blaring.

But we did manage to talk to a few locals, who, quite honestly, weren’t too shocked to learn that Britney’s little sister was pregnant, either because teen pregnancies aren’t all that uncommon in Kentwood, or because, after all, she is Britney’s little sister.

“They tried to keep it secret, I don’t know why. In Kentwood, everything gets out. You got kids who are 13 or 14 and pregnant in Kentwood, we’re about used to it around here,” Donald Church said. “But it seems like a big deal around here. … A lot of people can’t believe it. I used to work with her dad, and I couldn’t believe it. You know, little Jamie … it’s kind of freaky.”

“I heard about it on the radio, they were talking about it. It’s real popular down there. Everybody knows about them,” Raynard Norman laughed. “It’s embarrassing, kind of. If it’s not her, it’s Britney, so at least it’s not Britney this time. But I’m not surprised, not really. … Nobody’s surprised because it’s not uncommon with her family. Next time, use a condom.”

Those who agreed to speak with us also seemed mixed on just what to make of Jamie Lynn’s situation. Some viewed her as just another teenage girl, while others noted that she has plenty of young fans who view her as a role model, and as such, she should’ve put more thought into her actions.

“I heard not too long ago. I think it’s fine, you know? I congratulate her and her baby, wish them the best of luck. I wasn’t surprised. That’s life,” said Shainberly Young, an employee at the Popeyes Chicken & Biscuits that Spears frequents when she’s back home in Kentwood. “Me, personally, I have a little sister, she’s that age, and she’s pregnant, so I’m gonna support my sister from here on out. Everybody’s got to live. People here are saying, ‘Britney Spears’ sister is pregnant, OK, she’s pregnant. Let her handle her own business.’ ”

“I’ve been seeing it in the papers and all that. It’s not that big of a town, so it gets out pretty quick. It’s kind of a surprise, but not really, if you look at her sister and the crap with her,” Barry Church added. “[But] it’s not something to look up to. You’ve got all these little girls looking up to you and you’re 16 and pregnant. That’s not setting a good example at all. If some little 16-year-old girl would’ve gotten pregnant, it wouldn’t be that big of a deal, but since it’s Britney Spears’ little sister, it’s a different story.”

December 23rd, 2007Trisha beats the tops!

As 2007 comes to a close, Nashville has much in common with Hollywood. Both are industry towns that celebrate rejuvenated veterans and young, blond divas.

This was the Year of the Comeback for several veteran acts. The Eagles released their first studio album since 1979, “Long Road Out of Eden,” which topped the country charts and has been certified triple platinum. Quasi-retired Garth Brooks returned to the concert stage and had a No. 1 single with “More Than a Memory.” Billy Ray Cyrus had his biggest hit since the late ’90s with “Ready, Set, Don’t Go,” a duet featuring his daughter Miley (better known to kids as TV’s Hannah Montana).

Three young, blond divas who each had a stellar year are Carrie Underwood, whose sophomore album, “Carnival Ride,” hit No. 1, even as her debut, “Some Hearts,” continued to rack up sales in excess of six million units; Taylor Swift, a chart-topping 18-year-old whose youthful appeal makes her one of the hottest acts in Nashville; and Miranda Lambert, a feisty singer-songwriter whose sophomore CD, “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” won over mainstream fans, alt-country listeners and quite a few pop critics.

Here are 10 things that made country music interesting in 2007.

BEST ALBUM: Trisha Yearwood’s “Heaven, Heartache and the Power of Love” is commercial country music at its finest. Her rendition of “The Dreaming Fields” (penned by Matraca Berg and Gary Harrison) ranks among the greatest recordings in Yearwood’s illustrious, 17-year career.

BEST CONCERT: Bluegrass trio Nickel Creek teamed up with Fiona Apple for a dazzling Aug. 10 show at Ravinia, creating a vivid memory for fans — who’ll miss the trio now that it’s on an indefinite hiatus.

BEST COMEDIC MOMENT:Kellie Pickler’s televised interview at Wrigley Field on June 12 may have been just a ditzy act, but her popcorn-fueled discussion of the differences between baseball and NASCAR was priceless.

BEST COLLABORATION: Alison Krauss and Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant, under the guidance of producer T Bone Burnett, released the moody, mesmerizing “Raising Sand.”

BEST POST-BREAKUP SONG:”She Don’t Love Me” is the knife-in-the-heart highlight of Blake Shelton’s “Pure BS,” one of the best albums of the year.

BEST ARTIST WHO DESERVES A WIDER AUDIENCE:Patty Griffin received the Americana Music Association’s album of the year award for her brilliant “Children Running Through.”

BEST HIDDEN GEM: One of the year’s best country-rock albums is “Nashville Moon,” found in the “Sojourner” box set (four CDs and one DVD) by Magnolia Electric Co.

BEST MUSIC VIDEO: King Wilkie’s “Captivator” clip demonstrates that you don’t need a big budget to make a memorable video — but you gotta have a great song.

BEST HOLIDAY CD: Mindy Smith’s terrific “My Holiday” is bolstered by contributions from Chely Wright, who penned the jazzy “It Really Is (A Wonderful Life)” and collaborated with Smith on two other excellent tracks.

BEST DOUBLE ENTENDRES:Adults should check out “Let’s Duet” on the soundtrack to “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story.”

Artists’ Project Earth, a UK-registered charity, launched its ‘Fragile Planet’ music video featuring Sting and Rhythms del Mundo to raise global awareness on climate change issues.

The world premiere of ‘Fragile Planet’ took place on December 10, 2007 on the Indonesian island of Bali, just hours before former US Vice President Al Gore and the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change were honoured with the Nobel Peace Prize 2007 in Oslo, Norway. The music video premiered to an international audience of media and delegates attending the UN Conference on Climate Change.

‘Fragile Planet’ fuses musician Sting’s original ‘Fragile’ vocal soundtrack with the Latin sounds of Rhythms del Mundo. These haunting strains are set against poignant images of melting glaciers and forest fires and other visual reminders of the effects of climate change as well as messages that serve as calls-to-action for viewers around the world.

Artists’ Project Earth had produced and directed ‘Fragile Planet’, working closely with Sting and Rhythms del Mundo. This project followed an earlier musical collaboration with both parties to produce the ‘Rhythms del Mundo – Cuba’ CD which also featured other internationally renowned artistes such as Coldplay, U2 and Arctic Monkeys.

“We believe very strongly that the way to get through to people is through the mainstream, by appealing to as wide an audience as possible,” said Mr Kenny Young, director of Artists’ Project Earth.

He added: “Our aim at Artists’ Project Earth is to help create a better world through music and the arts and to support effective projects and awareness-raising initiatives to combat climate change – the most vital environmental issue of our times.”

The ‘Fragile Planet’ project was also sponsored by Global Environment Facility, United Nations Environment Programme, World Bank and Global Initiatives, who jointly hosted the world premiere event with Artists’ Project Earth.

According to Ms Monique Barbut, CEO and Chairperson at the Global Environment Facility, “This video elegantly demonstrates the growing clamour to halt climate change across the globe, where change-makers have been raising their voices in the quest for effective solutions. At the Global Environment Facility, we are pleased to join forces in this compelling reminder that we must all take action – through climate-friendly markets, policy change, meaningful spending to promote sustainable development, and personal responsibility – to tread lightly on this fragile earth.”

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/12/17/world-premiere-of-%e2%80%98fragile-planet%e2%80%99-music-video-featuring-sting/

After a whirlwind trip “back home” this weekend, the electricity going off at midnight last night until 4:30am with sub-freezing temperatures, we settled into a couple of warm cups of coffee this morning while Mini-DD scurried around getting ready for his first round of final exams. While I’m checking email, Mr. D peruses the newspaper providing any relevant or interesting information. This morning, he declared the sad headline, “Dan Fogelberg, Dead at 56″. I was stunned. Dan Fogelberg succumbed to an aggressive form of prostate cancer near dawn on Sunday morning, leaving this world as one of the great acoustical folk musician/singers of this generation.

Dan Fogelberg was another of those artists that my brother exposed me to when he was in college and I was just starting high school. Along with James Taylor, Jimmy Buffett and Carole King, Fogelberg was one of those great singer songwriters of the day and I was totally enamored by his free-spirit and natural vibe.

In 1971, Fogelberg signed with Clive Davis at Columbia Records joining artists Paul Simon, Bruce Springsteen and Billy Joel as emerging artists from Clive’s “stable”. He had recently dropped out of college and with the reluctant support of his father, and traveled cross country from Illinois to Calfornia to pursue his musical dreams. His father, Lawrence, had been a big band leader and what Dan referred to as a “legitimate musician” and no doubt, understood his youngest child’s passion for music.

Probably the song that Fogelberg “kun-NECK-ted” best with listeners was Auld Lang Syne. Many people identify with the “lost love” story and the song ended up in the top 10 in 1981. I vividly remember this song and relating so strongly to this song. That’s what good songs (and good songwriters) do. They relate. They kun-NECK.

Dan Fogelberg was truly a gentle, sensitive soul who helped shape the music of the seventies with great musicianship and wonderful songwriting. He will be missed and always remembered as one of the great singer-songwriters in the great proliferation of them from that decade.

I’m always amazed how even though a great talent and warm soul leaves this earth, it still keeps spinning. Even though “the world stops for no man”, it would seem that when somebody like Dan Fogelberg passes on, the world just might skip at least one beat.

Neo Soul is the antidote to the pervasiveness of whack R&B; so-called music that replaced the feelings, experiences, hopes and dreams of the average man or woman with contrived images and dreams of unattainable lavish lifestyles… of opulent wealth and perpetual *** with fantasy women. He didn’t start the trend but Eddie Murphy set the standard with his absurd ballad, the title track on his 1985 album ‘How Could It Be’, the record which spawned “Party All The Time.” Murphy is seen in a mansion, white of course, dressed in a white robe, and playing a white piano and warbling in a falsetto about how hard it is to be rich and date super models. Now all R&B has sunk to this level, aided and abetted by rap culture with its desperate, cartoonish materialism.

Soul music back in the day - the ’60s and ’70s - had songs like “Beauty Is Only Skin Deep” with lyrics like, “A pretty face you may not possess, but what I like about you is your tenderness.” You had songs where homeboy admitted straight out that he was an average hard workin’ dude or just poor, like the man in the often covered tune “The Poor Side of Town” by Johnny Rivers: “That rich guy you’ve been seein’ / Must have put you down / So welcome back baby / To the poor side of town.” You had songs full of real life wisdom like “Mama Said There’d Be Days Like This.” No more sentiments like these in R&B.

Thankfully we have neo soul artists like Angie Stone and D’Angelo and two New Jacks from Arizona, Mello Mello. Mixing rap and soul rooted in the soil of the classics, they are immediately comparable to OutKast. But whereas, even at the beginning, OutKast did one rap dominated song, with a vocal hook or chorus, or, conversely, a vocal number with a rap thrown in, Mello Mello has integrated the two parts with vocalist Rich Reddy and rapper Emcee Xtravagentways. Their sound, created by producer Raycean, is restrained and tasteful with a relaxed vibe that suits the album’s theme. Conceived as a unified concept album - rare today in iPod culture - ‘An Abstract Love Story’ it starts with mellow party jam where they extol their charms and invite you into their world, the world of love songs.

The rest of the CD is made up of love songs of various shades; from the initial step up and game spitting on “I Just Wanna Love You” (”I can hit with the charm that you just can’t see / Have your mind in the clouds like the finest weed / Help me bring to life this dream to share with you everything that belongs to me /… it ain’t about the late night call I just want to have it all”), to the erotic romantic come on of “The Best Thing for U Iz Me” (”The best thing for you is me… recognize your destiny”), and through rough patches of hurt in the song “Come Home” and the confusion of “Do You Luv Me or Hate Me.”

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/12/12/mello-mellos-love-storylove-and-sexy-drama/

One of the evergreen talents of the Chinese pop music scene, Andy Lau on Wednesday joined East Asia Music, strengthening the Hong Kong music empire’s already booming star list.

Lau’s new company also covers such stars as Miriam Yeung, Sammi Cheng and Leon Lai, the singer who, along with Lau, Jacky Cheung and Aaron Kwok, forms the venerated Four Cantopop Heavenly Kings of the 1990s.

East Asia Music on Wednesday threw a lavish press conference to welcome Lau, but held back the exact figure of his contract value.

A collection of Lau’s best-known hits since 2000 was released on the same day by the company to mark the occasion.

The release, entitled “Everyone is No.1,” also encompasses 11 music videos that were never released before. Lau himself calls it a keepsake of his signing with East Asia Music.

Raising many eyebrows, Lau also sold the copyright of about 500 songs made since 1993 to East Asia Music. He said he believed that the company was powerful enough to utilize the rights to the greatest possible value.

Meanwhile, Lau said that by signing with the company, he had committed himself to yielding at least 30 songs within the next three years, but it would not have any negative impact on his career outside music.

The versatile entertainer, now 46, has come a long way in his acting career, coping with some of his film dealings through his own company.

December 6th, 2007The Best of Akon - new show

Akon, a Senegalese-American, R & B and hip hop singer had made the charts since his debut in 2004. He had made two albums entitled “Trouble” and “Konvicted” respectively. He had released singles that reached the number one place at the Billboard Top 100 list, and the songs are “Smack That” and “Don’t Matter”. He also popularized the songs “Lonely”, “I Wanna Love You” and “Sorry, Blame it on Me”.

Akon have spent 5 years in jail long before his career because of a grand auto theft charge and also had been on several controversies. He had received a lot of criticisms from fans and critics alike because of these scandals.

In fact, Akon had made some of his singles from his experiences like “Sorry, Blame It on Me” for a girl he supposively molested in public. Akon had been nominated to a number of awards. He is also a record producer now and attend to a lot of gigs with known artists like Gwen Stefani. Akon’s real name is Aliaune Damala Bouga Time Puru Nacka Lu Lu Lu Badara Akon Thiam.

He`s new video - concert live in Cancun, Mexico is available.

Nearly a decade after the band’s demise, Led Zeppelin’s musical influence lives on and on

The Word Was Out About Kingdom Come. Even before the band’s debut album was released, the record-industry buzz was that it had the potential to be a smash hit. And there’s a good reason, say the buzzers: Kingdom Come sounds exactly like Led Zeppelin.

So it Kingdom Come hits big, nobody’ll be too surprised — because although the band may be the latest and most shameless outfit to learn that sounding like Led Zeppelin is a ticket to the top, it certainly isn’t alone. In just the past year or so, we’ve seen a slew of “New Zeppelins” of one sorr or another, including the L.A. underground thrash band Jane’s Addiction, the English reformed-punk band the Cult and the revived heavy-metal band Whitesnake.

Yeah, its been a long time since Led Zeppelin rock & rolled, but when it comes to modern mainstream rock music, Zep still has the touch of the gods. Classic-rock radio stations play the band’s music incessantly; bands from Def Leppard to Crowded House do versions of its songs; the Beastie Boys and the Cult appropriate its guitar riffs; just about every hard-rock and heavy-metal band that ever tromped onstage has borrowed something from its style and sound.

“In my opinion, next to the Beatles they’re the most influential band in history,” says Geffen Records A&R executive John David Kalodner, whose label will soon release a Jimmy Page solo album that advance reports say has a distinct Zeppelin feel. “They influence the way music is on records, AOR radio, concerts. They set the standards for the AOR-radio format with ‘Stairway to Heaven,’ having AOR hits without necessarily having Top Forty hits. They’re the ones who did the first real big arena concert shows, consistently selling out and playing stadiums without support. People can do as well as them, but nobody surpasses them.”

But if nobody surpasses Led Zeppelin, lots of people pay homage. Led Zeppelin’s ten albums — especially the string of six classics that began in 1969 with the band’s debut, Led Zeppelin, and ended in 1975 with Physical Graffiti — are reportedly one of the most lucrative back catalogs in rock, selling consistently year after year. Certainly, those sales are helped by Zeppelin’s status as the backbone of AOR and classic-rock radio, where “Stairway to Heaven” regularly ranks at or near the top of listeners’ polls and such Zeppelin songs as “Rock and Roll” and “Kashmir” get regular airings.

“Other than the Beatles, for album radio they’re the most important band,” says radio consultant Lee Abrams, who developed the superstars formar, which emphasizes star attractions like Zeppelin. “Nobody seems to get tired of them, and a lot of the new bands in that genre obviously owe a debt to them.”

If you want to start sending out bills to collect on that debt, you could start with the bands that are still using Zeppelin songs on their albums or, especially, in their live shows, where a few chords of “Whole Lotta Love” or “Rock and Roll” are a sure-fire way to ignite audiences. The latter song has become a hard-rock standard: it’s been performed lately by Patty Smyth, Def Leppard and Heart (which has been doing it for more than a decade). Frank Zappa has played “Stairway to Heaven” in some recent sets, as has the California underground band Camper Van Beethoven. Another California band, Lawndale, threw a few bars of “Whole Lotta Love” into a version of Dave Brubeck’s “Take Five” on its last album. On its tour last year, Crowded House would occasionally perform “Dancing Days” and “Whole Lotta Love.” And jazz saxophonist Branford Marsalis, who patterned one of his album covers after the cover of Plrysical Graffiti and says that even his purist brother Wynton has a fondness for Zeppelin, performed a pair of Zeppelin songs on Late Night with David Letteman.

“We’ve tried to drop ‘Rock and Roll’ from our sets,” says Heart singer Ann Wilson, a longtime Zeppelin fan, “but there’s always a place for it, and people always yell for it. They won’t let us stop, because it’s the kind of straight-ahead, no-tricks, no-nonsense rocker that people just crave.”

Crowded House isn’t quite as reverent with its own Zeppelin covers. The popsters from down under do “Whole Lotta Love” in what they call a “swing-shuffle arrangement.”

Still, they’re admirers. “Believe it or not, we are actually very, very big fans of Led Zeppelin,” says bassist Nick Seymour. “They’re probably one of the strongest influences that we have in common as members of the group. We do ‘Whole Lotta Love’ jokingly, tongue in cheek, but that’s not to say that we’re not big fans of the band.

“And I think the main reason one could find it amusing in 1988 is that there are so many bands that have supposedly been influenced by Led Zeppelin that don’t really seem to understand the soul of what Led Zeppelin were about. They just seem to have taken on the cosmetic appeal of the legacy that Led Zeppelin left around. And that’s unfortunate, because they’re taking advantage of a generation of kids that weren’t around for the original thing.”

This is the territory where Led Zeppelin’s real influence can be measured: in a way, nearly every heavymetal or hard-rock band has borrowed from one or another of Zeppelin’s innovations, whether it’s the massive, slow-paced blues sound, John Bonham’s thunderously plodding drums or Robert Plant’s posthippie visions of a land of myth and fantasy.

“So many bands have taken from Led Zeppelin it’s been quite incredible to watch,” says Ian Astbury, lead singer of the Cult, the British band whose second album, Electric, showed off a heavy quota of Zeppelin-style guitar riffs. “The whole ‘Hall of the Mountain King’ vibe was one thing for glam rockers to get into, you know? So all of a sudden you get fifteen American bands singing songs about climbin’ up mountains and slayin’ dragons and stuff, which is one of the things that Plant was into, that Old English and Celtic imagery. And then a lot of bands are into the black magic and the sorcery, which was Page’s kind of thing. And then you get other people trying to base a band around what Bonham did. It’s incredible that even as individuals they influenced differenr kinds of music.”

And so Zeppelin has made its mark on postpunk British rock (the Cult and the Mission U.K.), on rap music (the Beastie Boys, who rap to a couple of Zeppelin riffs on their album and in their concerts), on mainstream rock (Ann Wilson says she learned how to sing rock & roll by performing Zeppelin songs, and Boston has based its career on Tom Scholz’s version of Jimmy Page’s guitar grandeur) and on hard rock (everyone, including, of course, Kingdom Come).

And the band has also influenced two of last year’s biggest success stories. On “Bullet the Blue Sky,” from U2’s album The Joshua Tree, the Edge’s guitar sound is strikingly similar to the kind of churning, raw sound you’ll find in Zeppelin tunes like “The Rover.”

“I was never really interested in heavy metal or that kind of thing,” says the Edge, who has been known to toss off a Zeppelin, song during the band’s sound checks, “but Zeppelin, of all those groups, really had something.”

Whitesnake, meanwhile, became last year’s most surprising hard-rock hit at least partially because it sounds a lot like Zeppelin, Last summer. John David Kalodner, who is Whitesnake’s A&R rep, said, “Whitesnake is selling because of the quality of the record and the lack of a Led Zeppelin record in the marketplace. The kids really like records that sound like Led Zeppelin, so they’ll buy anything that’s close.” Kalodner now says that he’s unsure if the young record buyers are aware of Zeppelin’s influence on bands like Whitesnake and Kingdom Come. “Obviously it’s the same sort of music,” he says, “but I don’t know if seventeen-year-old kids make that comparison.” Nonetheless, the sound remains the same: lucrative. (White-snake singer David Coverdale declined to be interviewed for this story; a spokesman for Coverdale says the singer was irritated by a recent story in Rolling Stone in which Robert Plant called Whitesnake a “Led Zeppelin clone.”)

So why did Led Zeppelin, which seldom had its records played on AM radio and probably sounds like sludge to many casual listeners, become so influential? You could say it’s partly because of nostalgia, but in this case it’s nostalgia that cuts in different ways at once: if it’s reasonable to call Zeppelin the first band of the Seventies, the band that ushered in the heavier, gloomier, more ponderous music of that era, it’s just as easy to dub it the last band of the Sixties, the final glorious moment fora community of starry-eyed dreamers bound together by music. Led Zeppelin in many ways marked a dividing line in rock history - but with the unbearable heaviness of its sound, the often surprising finesse of Jimmy Page’s arrangements and production and the mystical yisions in Robert Plant’s lyrics, the band appealed to listeners on both sides of that dividing line.

“They balance that hard-rock edge with being ethereal,” says Lee Abrams. “And when I probe people and ask them about why they’re so into Zeppelin, it always gets to that. They have that hard edge, but they don’t drive you nuts. They’re sort of cosmic at the same time, and it’s a balance that people really like.”

Or you could ask a few fans about Zeppelin - fans like Wayne Hussey, lead vocalist for the Mission U.K. His band recently enlisted Zeppelin bassist-keyboardist John Paul Jones to produce its upcoming album. “I think, essentially, they were a band,” says Hussey, “and everything they did came across as a band. They got self-indulgent at times, but they wrote great songs, and when they performed them as a band, the power of it really came across.”

Mitch Easter, the leader of Let’s Active, who is also a noted producer, became a Zeppelin fan for life around the time of Physical Graffiti. “We started this sorta crusade when Let’s Active first toured,” he says, “playing ‘Black Dog’ and stuff when we’d go to do interviews at college radio stations. It was really outrageous to do that back then, but it was good fun, and there was no denying that those records were powerful and cool. And we also did ‘The Rover’ and ‘Dancing Days’ in concert for a while. Every few shows we’d get a New Wave-diehard type who just didn’t get it, who’d say, ‘What are you doing, man?’ like it’s a sacrilege. But most people really dig it, you know.”

Ian Astbury became a fan of Zeppelin when Liverpool clubs started playing Seventies hard rock around 1980, when punk began to fade: “I think they’re probably the greatest British live rock band,” he says. “The one that had a real mystique, a real aura and presence about the band. It wasn’t like a band; it was like some kind of moving spiritual roadshow. Led Zeppelin were a major influence on the Cult - I mean, we feel like the new generation, ourselves and the Mission and other new bands. I guess we feel like the new, shall we say, golden gods.” He laughs. “If anybody reads that, they’re gonna go, ‘Oh, what an asshole.’ But it kinda feels that way, and it’s great.”

Still, Astbury admits that one event could give all the new golden gods a real run for their money. “I’ll tell you one thing,” he says. “If Zeppelin ever did a reunion tour, that’d be the biggest challenge for any of our lot. Led Zeppelin, you can’t compete with them.”

Even though Moss Park dance punk duo MSTRKRFT believe that, as dance music artists, “there’s much better places for us to be,” (this is said right at the 4:16 mark, of all times) Toronto’s other homegrown house producers have taken the entire electro world by storm in the last few months. One needs only to point one’s browser to the website Beatport, which has quickly become the DJ world’s number one website for downloading high-bitrate dance music, and look on the “Top Downloads” panel on the lower right. In that period of time, there has been at least one track by a Toronto-based artist on the Top 10, and in the last five months, at least one Ontarian (if you include Windsor-raised Richie Hawtin, a.k.a. Plastikman.) Here is a brief look at three Toronto artists who have been conquering dancefloors around the world with their popular tracks on Beatport:

Multiple Juno Award-winning Hatiras’ breakthrough track “Spaced Invader” was hardly the beginning, but since then, Hatiras has been jamming in the studio, running Hatrax Records and Blow Media, showcasing brand new music with his weekly radio show Hatiras Presents, and selling dance chart topping tunes on Beatport like a machine. At least one of his latest smash hits “Bass Monkeys,” “Gutter Music,” or “Poppin’ Beats,” whose launch party was A.D/D.’s RANDOMLAND at CiRCA less than two weeks ago, will be playing on a soundsystem near you in the near future, guaranteed.

The eyes of the world turned to Toronto late last year when they began to watch the rising star Deadmau5. This summer, in the week of August 26, 2007, Deadmau5 had five tracks in the Top 10 on Beatport, making him one of the singularly most successful Beatport artists of all time. Through his label mau5trap, he has released banging tracks like “I Thought Inside Out” (with Chris Lake), “Complications” and “Desynchronised.” While it seems like Deadmau5 would have trouble keeping himself in the city for long enough to record new chart toppers with his frequent appearances in Europe and Japan, there is no shortage of his new techy beats for DJ’s to devour.

Jelo has been a mainstay of Toronto’s club scene for over a decade, with residencies at some of the city’s most famous hotspots. A few months ago, Los Angeles-based DJ Dan, sometimes called the world’s number one house DJ, spun an unreleased track by Jelo and Deadmau5 called “The Reward is Cheese” to kick off his set at Opulent Temple, the largest soundsystem camp at Burning Man. Cue November 19, 2007, when the track was released on the label Rising Trax. “The Reward is Cheese” instantly soared to number one on Beatport. His latest tune “Darke,” featuring a remix by D.A.V.E. The Drummer, is poised for party domination.

It is incredibly rare for any artist in their lifetime to record a Top 10 track, but even rarer for them to be from Toronto. These tunes are currently blasting out of speakers somewhere in the world, bringing the sound of our city to the ears of millions.


© 2007 blog.mp3adrenalin.com | Powered by Wordpress